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ResearchPaper
2017

Lord of the Lemons : origin and dynamics of state capacity

Abstract (English)

To better understand the role of taxation in the emergence of states, this article presents an incomplete contract model of an agricultural society in which information asymmetries cause inefficient taxation, and hence outmigration, uprisings, and rent-seeking, but also urbanization. We propose a geographic index of information costs, observability, to test our model. Our case study is the Holy Roman Empire, which had a relatively homogeneous institutional framework, state of technology, culture, and ethnic composition across hundreds of observed states, for over 500 years. We find a robust link between observability and states’ tax capacity, their size, and their survival.

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Publication license

Publication series

Hohenheim discussion papers in business, economics and social sciences; 2017,22

Published in

Faculty
Faculty of Business, Economics and Social Sciences
Institute
Institute of Economics

Examination date

Supervisor

Edition / version

Citation

DOI

ISSN

ISBN

Language
English

Publisher

Publisher place

Classification (DDC)
330 Economics

Original object

Standardized keywords (GND)

Sustainable Development Goals

BibTeX

@techreport{Wahl2017, url = {https://hohpublica.uni-hohenheim.de/handle/123456789/6190}, author = {Wahl, Fabian and Huning, Thilo R.}, title = {Lord of the Lemons : origin and dynamics of state capacity}, year = {2017}, school = {Universität Hohenheim}, series = {Hohenheim discussion papers in business, economics and social sciences}, }
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